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Charles Jumbe, PhD & Arild Angelsen, PhD Bunda College of Agriculture

Do the poor benefit from forest devolution policies? Evidence from forest co-management in Malawi. Charles Jumbe, PhD & Arild Angelsen, PhD Bunda College of Agriculture Centre for Agricultural Research & Development P.O. Box 219, Lilongwe Malawi. Background.

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Charles Jumbe, PhD & Arild Angelsen, PhD Bunda College of Agriculture

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  1. Do the poor benefit from forest devolution policies? Evidence from forest co-management in Malawi Charles Jumbe, PhD & Arild Angelsen, PhD Bunda College of Agriculture Centre for Agricultural Research & Development P.O. Box 219, Lilongwe Malawi

  2. Background • More than 90% of the 13 million people live in rural areas • Forests as a vital source of energy for cooking (5% with electricity) • Forests a source of income for people living within or adjacent to forests Women’s popular trade Men’s popular trade

  3. The Context • For many years forest policies were restrictive • Forest cover continue to decline • From 59% of total land (9.4 mn ha) in 1960s • to 47% in the 1980s • to 37% by mid 1990s • to 27% currently (FAO, 2005)

  4. Government’s response • National forestry policy (1996) • Forestry act (1997) • Key features • Removal of restrictions • Co-management of protected forest areas. • Emphasis on women’s participation in forest management

  5. Forest Co-management Program • Designed as an experiment in 1996 in two sites, Chimaliro & Liwonde/Machinga Forest Reserves (WB &DfID)

  6. Objectives of the Project • Improve forest management in return for increase access to forest products • Enhance contribution of forests to rural poverty reduction

  7. Key distinguishing feature

  8. Purpose of Evaluation • Evaluating program effectiveness in harnessing the contribution of forests to poverty reduction • Identifying households adversely affected by the program - designing appropriate interventions • Draw lessons for designing future programs

  9. Research Questions • Focus on vulnerable households- defined by participation, gender & poverty class • Does participation forest management address the plight of the poor as intended? • Who is capturing the rent >>> do the poor benefit?

  10. Analytical Framework • Theoretical model • Roy’s self-selection model (Roy, 1951) • Choice whether to participate based on utility • Comparison of utility of participation & non-participation • Econometric methods • Endogenous switching regression model –to estimate forest income • Selection bias correction • Propensity score matching • Measure net gains of participating in the program • Overall program impact (full sample & across the two, Chimaliro & Liwonde) • Impact on vulnerable household (women & poor households)

  11. Analytical framework (cont’d) • Decomposition Analyses • Estimate the extent of inequality in benefit sharing between groups of participants (Reimers, 1983) • Male-female income disparity • Poor-rich income disparity

  12. Data sources • Part I: Participatory Rural Appraisal:Context Analysis & basic data collection (e.g., household list, persipectives of the program • Part II: household survey: Random sampling of participants and non-participants • Sample: Total sample 404; Chimaliro 205 & 199 Liwonde 199

  13. What do raw data show-A synopsis?

  14. Results from Matching techniques (impact)

  15. Decomposition Results: Identifying Sources of inequality in benefit sharing

  16. Summary of key findings • Does participation in the program lead to better outcomes? • Overall, there are marginal benefits to participants • The program drastically reduce forest revenue for participants in Liwonde (23% share of forest income) • Forest income for female & low-income households is enhanced by participating in the program • Who captures the benefits of the program? • High-income & male participants!! • Discrimination against female participants. • Differences in endowments (e.g. education, experience, household assets) in favour of high-income participants

  17. Key lessons & implications for policy • Forest co-management is not a panacea for addressing poverty in different socioeconomic conditions 1. Sensitive to the short-term needs of the local people • Complimentary interventions to provide alternative livelihood sources (e.g., where forests have low economic value) 2. Discrimination can have adverse affects the disadvantage group Conclusion: FCM has the potential of enhancing rural incomes • Design gender & poverty-focussed devolution programs • Eliminate capture by the elite • Induce greater participation by vulnerable households • Increase the allocation to be shared by the community • 70% Government & 30% local community

  18. Charlesjumbe@yahoo.com • Land Economics . November 2006 . 82 (4): 562–581

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